January 2017

January 19, 2017

Dinner in 5 minutes? Sure, just open a can of soup and unwrap a sandwich from the deli.

There may be days when that is necessary. But tack on a few more minutes and you can have a real dinner from scratch. Here's how to do it in 45 minutes, provided you have the ingredients ready to go:

45 Minutes--Put skinned chicken thighs seasoned with salt and pepper in the oven at 350 degrees.

30 minutes--Put a pan of vegetables in to roast alongside the chicken. Those in the photo include packaged ready-to-use baby carrots, regular orange carrots, red bell pepper, onion and shishito peppers, seasoned with olive oil, soy sauce, agave syrup and any herbs that are handy--fresh is best, if you have them.

5 minutes--Heat packaged peeled steamed butternut squash in the microwave. This takes 2 minutes. Turn the squash into a bowl, mash to puree and stir in some butter (optional), brown sugar and cinnamon, then reheat.

Serving time: Arrange the chicken, some of the vegetables and squash on plates. Drizzle the chicken with bottled balsamic glaze.

January 11, 2017

It was a tough competition. Food bloggers were showing off their finest treats at the annual dessert cookoff staged by Melissa's Produce.

I worked all one afternoon to produce a glorious lemon cake, which I dusted with powdered sugar, then glittery gold sprinkles and surrounded with candied lemon slices.

It looked beautiful, and one competitor even told me she thought it was the best dessert there. But it didn't win any of the six prizes. Well, that's what Olympic competitors, race horses and beauty contest hopefuls face. You can't always be number one or even number six.

Here is my cake, surrounded by winning entries. Actually, it was good not to win, because the prizes were cookbooks, and I have thousands of those.

And my ego wasn't insulted because it wasn't my recipe. It's from the book "In a French Kitchen" by Susan Hermann Loomis, which is one of the best in my collection. Loomis is well known for her cooking school, On Rue Tatin, in France.

This is the book, displayed when Loomis appeared at Melissa's in August, 2015. She didn't present the lemon cake that day. I found it on my own.

Originally from a French refugee from Algeria, the cake is so delicious and easy that I make it often. The candied lemon slices that decorated it were from the Internet.

Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. Butter a 9-inch cake pan, then line it with parchment paper.

Sift together the flour, salt and the baking powder onto a piece of parchment or waxed paper.

In a mixer or a large bowl, beat the eggs and vanilla sugar [I didn't have vanilla sugar, so I used granulated sugar and 1/2 teaspoon vanilla] until they are thick and pale yellow. Add the dry ingredients to the eggs and sugar alternately with the milk, beginning and ending with the dry ingredients. Fold in the zest, then fold in the melted butter.

Pour the batter into the prepared cake pan, and bake in the center of the oven until the cake is golden and slightly puffed, about 30 minutes. Check it after 25 minutes--if a cake tester stuck in the center of the cake comes out clean, it is baked. [My oven bakes hot, so I heated it to 375 degrees and reduced the heat to 350 when I put the cake in. It was done in 25 minutes.]

Let cool to room temperature on a wire rack. To remove the cake from the pan, run a knife around the edge of the cake, place the wire rack on the pan and flip it. Shake firmly, and the cake will drop from the pan. Remove the parchment paper and let the cake cool, right side up.

To serve, transfer the cake to a serving platter, mounded-side up, and dust with confectioner's sugar.